From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
Bharuch today is a
large
seaport city of more than a million inhabitants and a
municipality in
Bharuch district in the state of
Gujarat,
India.
As a trading depot, the limitations of coastal shipping made it a
regular terminus via several mixed trade routes of the fabled spice
and silk trading between East and West, so that it became known to
history by various names such as Bharakuccha, Bhrigu Kaksha
(the domain of
Bhrigu, an ancient Indian sage), Bhroach, as well as
Bhrauch.
History
Bharuch was once but a small village on
the banks of the
Narmada River but that rivers inland access to central and
northern India and with a location in the sheltered Gulf of Khambat in
the era of coastal sea travel grew and prospered as a trading
transshipment center and ship building port. Until very modern times
the only effective way to move goods was by
water transport, and Baruch had sheltered waters in a
era without
weather forecasting, compasses, and when shipping was necessarily
limited to coastal navigation, and the general East-West course of the
Narmada gave access to the rich inland empires at the upper reaches of
the Narmada, including easy caravan access to the
Ganges
valley and Delhi plain.
Certainly by the 500s BC, the city was
known (at least by reputation, via land-sea routes reaching the
Levant)
to the Arab
and
Ethiopian traders feeding goods westwards to the
Egyptians,
Greeks,
Persians,
Western Romans,
Carthaginians, and eventually, the
Eastern Roman Empires, and the
Republic of Venice. It is likely even the
Phonecians knew of it and so it has acted since antiquity as a
link port to the luxury goods trade from the
Far
East and the interior of the Indian sub-continent to the
civilizations of
South-west Asia, the
Middle-East, the Mediterranean basin including Northern Africa and
Europe.
Mythological
history
It was considered to be sacred among
sages, and they would come to Bharuch and pray. In Bharuch, the
celebrated
Asura king
Mahabali, conducted a great sacrifice. In this sacrifice, came a
Bhrahmin boy named
Vamana,
who interfered with the king's sacrifice and put an end to his reign.
A sage named
Guru Shukracharya, in the lineage of Bhrigu, was the priest of
king Mahabali.
There is also a story which indicates
that
Brighu along with his kins asked for temporary access to Bharuch
which then belonged to
Lakshmi
since Bharuch is located on the banks of river
Narmada
also known as Rudra Deha. Chanra Mauli Mahadev is the
Kul Devata of
Bhargavs of Bharuch Brighu never left the place and the
hermitage/Ashram of Brighu Rishi is located on the Banks of Narmada. |